The music video for "Fell on Black Days" was directed by Jake Scott, who would later direct the music video for "Burden in My Hand".[8] The black-and-white video consists of a filmed live performance of the band in a studio, with Brendan O'Brien producing the recording. The video was filmed at Seattle's Bad Animals Studio in October 1994. The video was released in November 1994.[8] It is available on the CD-ROM Alive in the Superunknown. The video version of the track can be found on the "Fell on Black Days" single, Songs from the Superunknown, and the Deluxe Edition of the band's 2010 compilation album Telephantasm.

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Black Out Days


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I am more or less standing on the same spot on both screenshots. As you can see, its not like that every day, but on some days. Even if thats supposed to be storm weather, not even a flashlight would have helped me there.

The Ten Black Days of Eleint, also known locally as the Troubles,[1] was a period of absolute chaos and mayhem in the Kingdom of Tethyr, from the 13th to the 22nd of Eleint in the Year of the Bright Blade, 1347 DR. These days of siege warfare, riots, and outright slaughter[2] served as the dark beginning of the Tethyrian Interregnum, a period of about twenty years when the kingdom was without a clear ruler.[3][4]

The First Rebellion lasted for three years,[2] and was waged between the thirteen districts of Panem and the Capitol. With support from District 13 and its military arsenal, the rebels were presumably able to fight on par with the Capitol's forces for some time. During the final two years of the conflict, the rebels decidedly had the upper hand. The Capitol had been entirely cut off from outside support, causing massive starvation and dire poverty among its residents. Many families had to sell their possessions to the black market in order to survive, and some even turned to cannibalism.[3] In addition, the rebel forces regularly bombed the city. Having taken over District 5's bomb warning system, they were able to deliver fake warnings to the Capitol, allowing them to do extra damage during the real bombings.[4]

Penn Period is 40 minutes on Cherry and Black days that is designed to offer students and teachers an opportunity to engage in areas of interest. Students will request their Penn Period from the classes teachers have developed. The intention is to offer an opportunity for students and staff to engage in similar interests and build relationships. Examples of Penn Period options are Book Club, Strategic Gaming, Sewing, E-Gaming, Advanced Placement Tutoring, and Entomology.

That is when you sometimes just have to accept that here I am and I can do nothing about that darkness right now. You just have to wait a bit. A day, or a few days. Sometimes even longer. Sometimes the time does the trick. And the fact that you stop fighting against yourself. You just accept the situation, accept that dark days are a part of the life of human being. And what is most important, you accept that there will be a better day.

Harry slumped on the bed with a groan and stared listlessly at the ceiling. It had been days since he saw another person, and even his fear and anxiety about his friends' fate had given way to apathy. He was trapped, wandless, and the room's scant furnishings were enchanted beyond breaking.

After Dobby had Apparated the others out but before he could return for Harry, Death Eaters rushed into the cellar. He didn't remember much but their agitated swearing and the agony of their curses as they took out their anger on him. Just before he blacked out under a Cruciatus Curse, he heard a shrill female voice interrupt them.

Although I think most of the posts prior to now really are pretty much right - the song captures extreme depression; however theres one piece of the puzzle I think your all but a few missing.....drug addiction. Theres a difference between a "depressing" song and a song that entails the darkest corner of earth that any human mind can possibly go. A depressing song is something like "Everybody Hurts" by REM......Fell on Black Days is a different monster. The two main reasons I think this is specifically talking about the angst that drug addiction brings you is A) The rock culture during the time this was a huge culture of revolution, change and innovation. Drug use/addiction was a huge part of the rock content during this time and always has been(keep in mind the work of Kurt Cobain of Nirvana and Layne Staley of Alice in Chains ) My second reason is the way he compares and contrasts a seemingly successful, functional and happy lifestyle to one that is absolutely decadent and full of agony. Being a former Cocaine addict I can tell you just how different being in a state of addiction is to being sober full time. Being addicted to a "hard drug" is just about the most bleak I have ever been emotionally, the way Chris describes "not seeing the light" and compares that to the common theme here which is "black" also echoes this theory. Also keep in mind drug addiction typically effects everybody around you especially the people you know which is also something Chris describes in this song. I cant say for sure if I think this is a PERSONAL song from Chris's point of view, it could also be from the point of view of someone he knew; which could have very well been someone like Kurt or Layne.

chris said it was about when he was a kid and he got really depressed and isolated himself. black days are just when you stop being happy for no reason and everything seems much worse than it usually does

As a former heroin junkie myself, i have a different point of view to this song than some might- Ok, I think it's very generalized to say "it's about depression", and few people on this site got it right, at least in my opinion that is. Smolten Grove hit the points on the head, though. It makes perfect sense that it is about drug addiction- to ANY drug, but I think it may be heroin specifically, for a number of reasons. First of all, the point in time of this being written/released, it was a big epidemic, but especially in the grunge and rock scene! Think Kurt, Layne, Andrew Wood (Mother Love Bone frontman), Scott Weiland, and MANY others! More rockstars than not, at that point in time! Heroin IS black (on the west-coast, it is..) so I can't help but wonder if it is almost to be taken LITERAL...Fell on BLACK days. People even CALL heroin "black" out here, so..And in a way it IS about depression, but more a more specific kind- addiction IS depressing! So yes. Also, Chris was very close to/and once was roommates with Andrew Wood, who died in 1995 from a heroin overdose, as did many other more high-profile rockstars that were acquaintances and friends. So it could be written from their point of view, or maybe Chris himself had delved into using it at some points..And I think what brings this point home is "I want to know, if this could be my fate"..because once you NEED a drug, especially a drug like heroin, you start to feel like it is inescapable no matter how bad you want to get away from it, and you can often end up feeling defeated enough that you just resignedly accept that this is how things are now and always will be, that this was your fate, you made your bed and will now have to lie in it forever. I know I felt that way, and I know most people do, sooner or later. You just reach that point where you can't help yourself, so you feel like it is fated.

This is a special song to me. It came on the car radio when I was on my way home after a month alone in a spectacular fire lookout, back in 89 or 94 or whenever this song was new. A month alone always makes one sensitive. I was stunned, listening to this song. I was in tears. And then I couldn't find out who or what it was, not for months. I had listened to one of Soundgarden's early albums and I wasn't impressed; I'm still not, with their early work. It just isn't there yet. They're amateurish. So eventually I found out, and got the next two albums, and love them.


So when I first came to this thread and read it, I couldn't believe that no one but me hears the first stanza tell how things used to be fine, and "now I'm doing time," and no one but me thinks, "This is a convict singing." You know, as in "doing time?" That's where the expression comes from. Does anyone out there know that? Unable to fly? Hands tied?


Well, one person got it, he was reminded of when he was arrested, but wasn't clear that that's what the song is about. 


So then I had to ask myself if it made any difference: either way, prison is being used as a metaphor for a bad time, so does it matter? My way, Chris Cornell who was never in prison is singing a song for millions of listeners who were never in prison, and he chooses to use prison as a metaphor which will help make it more vivid for us to think about depression.


Everyone else is just hearing the everyday cliche "doing time," which is most often used to say that a person is bored with their life and vaguely supposes that something may come along sooner or later to engage them fully in their own life. It hints at a bit of self-pity for a person who is merely unengaged in their life to use an expression originally used by convicts to describe prison terms. But the rest of the song offers plenty to convey the idea of deep failure and depression.


Still, I think it's more dramatic and poetic to hear a prisoner regretting a life fallen on black days, and its his own fault for having harmed others. And he remembers his early promise, his potential for good. The anguished chorus, How would I know that this could be my fate?


PS. I've never understood "Sure don't mind the change." What change? The change in his life that the whole rest of the song describes is tragic for him. 2351a5e196

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